By Martha Taumata Faavae

There is unlikely to be any Gagaifomauga No. 3 by-election after the constituency MP La’aulialemalietoa Leuatea Schmidt was instructed not to resign.  

The constituency met yesterday and instructed the MP not to abandon the seat.

There was legally time to call a by-election for the Constituency but it all depended on MP La’auli handing in an official written resignation to the Speaker  of the House.

The Electoral Commissioner Faimalomatumua Mathew Lemisio and the Clerk of the Legislative Assembly, Tiatia Graeme Tualaulelei, confirmed the pending chain reaction when Newsline Samoa followed up on the resignation on Friday.

 “We have as yet to receive an official letter from the MP,” said Legislative Assembly Clerk Tiatia told Newsline Samoa.

The by-election process starts with official confirmation from the Speaker of the House  to the Office of the Electoral Commissioner.

Under the Constitution, no by-election maybe held six months away from the general elections, which in this case is still about 9 months away.

 The Speaker of the House will officially issue a warrant to confirm the resignation of a member. 

Once that is in place it will then trigger the Office of the Electoral Commissioner to make official arrangements for a date to be set for a by-election.

The Electoral Commissioner Faimalomatumua was unable to comment without the official warrant of resignation from the Speaker.

Parliament went into a storming session at the start of the week when the House Ethics Committee recommended the Gagaifomauga No. 3 MP La’aulialemalietoa be reprimanded or suspended for three months without pay and allowance.

A  Committee investigation found the MP guilty of false claims in the recent debate on the national budget that a 200kva generator Government bought for $300,000 tala was extravagant.

The generator was for the new Tanumalala Prison and the MP claimed that he bought a similar one for his Constituency at a much cheaper cost.

The Finance Committee investigated the claims and its findings were forwarded to the Ethics Committee.

The recommendation by the Ethics Committee led to a verbal pummeling in a House debate on whether the MP  be reprimanded or suspended.

The ordeal for the MP ended unexpectedly when he shocked everyone by  announcing his resignation to the Speaker before he walked out while the Prime Minister was on the floor.

 The resignation spilled out of the House into public debate on social media where it is still continuing.

The PM defended the lashing of the MP by members as necessary to maintain the integrity of the House.

Opposition MP Olo Vaai rejected the Ethics Committee report and recommendations as too much over an issue that was only a ‘scratch’.

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